National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Czech Literary Anarchism in the Context of Socialism and the Women's Movement (1890-1914)
Hylmar, Radek ; Heczková, Libuše (advisor) ; Wiendl, Jan (referee) ; Merhautová, Lucie (referee)
Czech Literary Anarchism in the Context of Socialism and the Women's Movement (1890-1914) Abstract The thesis focuses on Czech pre-WWI anarchism. It analyses it as a modernist movement comprising various activities spanning political propaganda, proposals of social organisation and thinking about moral values as well views on the arts and literary production. The aim is to present literary texts written by anarchists against a backdrop of other types of expression. At the same time, the thesis assesses anarchism in the historical context of other political, social, artistic and philosophical movements. We study the interweaving of ideological and aesthetic schemes of Czech anarchism, especially with socialism and feminism, but also concerning decadence, Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophy and writings of the German Friedrichshagen poets' and anarchists' circle. The thesis focuses on how anarchism understands human beings and their relationship to the world and society. Given the anarchists' focus on the free individual, we present strategies of emancipation from traditional conventions and institutions such as marriage, family and the state. We also concentrate on reforms concerning morals and similarities with the feminist turn to one's own bodily and psychical experiences as starting points for setting...
Kinds of love and their place in social work
PATEROVÁ, Jana
This bachelor thesis deals with the analysis of different types of love, hope and forgiveness. Each kind of love is defined and there are described its symptoms and possible adverse effects of misuse or misunderstanding. The work also points to the suitability or unsuitability of the presence of various kinds of love in the social work, having regard to the functioning of the professional relationship between the social worker and the client. The terms of hope and forgiveness, which are dedicated to the two last chapters, there are explained and described as dynamic processes. The emphasis is placed on the basic and vital status of all three terms in the field of social work and in the life of a man at all.

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